(mysterious music)…- Let's go back to our README.…We've handled…steps one and two and three of task one.…Step four says there's nothing else,…so we're now complete with task one.…So it'd exit the model without using it.…Now, we don't have a way to exit it yet.…We're going to come back to that…later in our exercise today.…Right now the model, once it pops up,…it stays there until we refresh the page.…

So, we'll fix that later.…So task one,…little overwhelming perhaps, but it really did…start to show some practical application of the…concepts that we were just FUBARing earlier.…So, I hope that answered some questions that…people had earlier.…We'll be looking at more of those practical…applications, that's the goal here.…This part of the workshop is all about…the practical applying, doing practical application…of the concepts from earlier.…

So let's turn our attention now to task two.…It says we need to open up carousel.js…and details.js, and so I want you to go ahead and do those.…I'm going to close out a few of these files that I don't need…

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6/16/2017

No amount of learning the theory of JavaScript will substitute for actually practicing the implementation of it. Even before you adopt a framework, learning how to organize the different bits of JavaScript—modularizing, decoupling, etc.—will make a positive impact on the quality of your code. Once you've mastered those techniques, you can turn your attention to building code that you can share between the client—browser—and the server—Node. This course covers how arrange and systemize your JavaScript code. Learn how to organize your code, work with modules, manage server-side JavaScript, and add a shared module.

Note: This course was created on 03/29/2016 by Frontend Masters. We are pleased to host this content in our library.